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Introducing the Globally Harmonized System
for Lab Workers
Ralph Stuart, CIH and Aaron Batchelder
Cornell University Dept. of Environmental Health and Safety
October, 2013
Goals for GHS Training
• Describe the importance of chemical labeling for community safety
• Provide an overview of the GHS system • Show specific examples of what its terms mean • Describe next steps for Cornell labs
What are Chemicals?
Chemicals are the most common laboratory hazards. From a regulatory point of view, “chemicals” are materials that retain their physical and health properties when they change their shape.
The Importance of Communica:on
The U.N.’s Globally Harmonized System
Hazard Classifica@on Criteria – Defini@ons for “toxic”, “flammable”, “corrosive” and other important chemical words
– An English label on a Chinese chemical said: “Hurts skin hardly”
Hazard Communica@on – Labels – Safety Data Sheets
GHS Labeling Overview
• Chemical Name • 9 pictograms in 3 groups
– Physical Hazards – Health Hazards – Environmental Hazards
• 2 signal words: Danger and Warning
The GHS Pictograms
The GHS system also lays out a specific format for chemical labels and Safety Data Sheets
The Defini:on of Flammable Liquids
• The GHS established specific interna@onal defini@ons of the hazards. One example is flammability
Why Boiling Point? Bleves
A boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion is an explosion caused by the rupture of a vessel containing a pressurized liquid above its boiling point.
The Importance of Chem Storage
• Flammable liquids need to be protected from the possibility of a fire in the lab
• And remember that cooling flammable chemicals requires a special refrigerator.
This refrigerator was used to store a flammable liquid; the cooling compartment filled with vapors from the loosely capped bottle. The fumes exploded when the refrigerator switch caused a spark.
What are Oxidizers?
Oxidizers are chemicals that can react with solvents to cause a fire. Examples of oxidizers are nitric acid and dichromates.
Oxidizers in Ac:on
A Closer Look at the Irritant Classifica:on
The Impact of Concentra:on on Hazard
• At home: Chloraseptic: Phenol 0.5%
• On campus: Preservative solutions in gross anatomy labs (around 2%)
• At home: Paint strippers – 20% phenol
• In the lab: phenol – chloroform solutions are 50% phenol
A Case History of Phenol Exposure
A laboratory technician had been exposed to vapors containing phenol and had often spilled phenol on his trousers. The spills resulted in skin irritation; symptoms related to these exposures included loss of appetite, darkened urine, and muscle pain in the legs and arms. He stayed away from his job for several months during which time his health gradually improved. He returned to the lab and in a period of 45 minutes had an immediate recurrence of muscle pain and subsequent darkened urine.
Specific Toxic Organ Toxicity
The Specific Target Organ Toxicity is a reminder that certain chemicals can have effects on specific organs. Consult the SDS on which organ the chemicals you use can affect in order to understand the symptoms associated with such exposures.
Beyond the Label
• The Safety Data Sheet to iden@fy any unusual proper@es (for example, forming peroxides in storage).
• Safety Data Sheets also provide specific health informa@on such as signs and symptoms associated with exposure to the chemical and any government standards that apply to those chemicals.
• Remember that this informa@on applies to that specific chemical and not to reac@ons and chemicals that may form as a chemical process proceeds.
GHS in Real Life
• GHS is designed for chemical users. It does not replace other regulatory requirements for other settings.
• For example, Department of Transportation labels for shipping containers are not changing.
• OSHA’s goal for 2013 is the workers understand GHS labels in their workplaces
• Cornell EHS are installing a chemical inventory plaYorm which will provide easy access to GHS informa@on and labels for chemicals. It be available in 2014.
What You Need to Do Next
Labeling Experimental Samples
In house containers must be labeled with: • Chemical identification, including
an approximate concentration of the chemical
• Hazards associated with the chemicals
• The name of the person to contact for information about the materials
• Date the material was made
• HASP: the Hazard Assessment and Signage Program • Iden@fies a variety of lab hazards and the associated risk level in each lab room
• Posted at room entry • Includes room contact informa@on and warnings for emergency response informa@on
Labeling Laboratories
What Happens in Laboratories?
• Google reported 148 laboratory responses in the US in 2011 (3 per week): 45% were in research labs, 25% in high school labs, 20% in industry and 10% in teaching labs
45% were explosions and fires 36% of the @me someone was hurt, 1 person died immediately